Uzbekistan Blasts Shake U.S. and Israeli Embassies
MOSCOW — Suicide bombers on Friday struck the U.S. and Israeli embassies in Uzbekistan, killing two local guards and injuring at least nine others in the second wave of attacks this year against a key U.S. ally during the war in Afghanistan.
The prosecutor general’s office also was hit in the coordinated afternoon attacks in the capital city of Tashkent. It sustained more damage than either of the embassies, where guards prevented bombers from entering.
The attacks came as 15 Muslim militants linked to the Al Qaeda terrorist network went on trial in a series of bombings and other assaults in March that killed 47 people.
The explosions Friday caused relatively little physical damage but rattled a country in which the U.S. has maintained an air base crucial to the battle against Islamic militants in neighboring Afghanistan.
On a residential side street, the body of an apparent bomber lay near a small crater outside the heavily guarded U.S. Embassy compound. Nearby streets were cordoned off for much of the evening.
“Something exploded with a very loud noise in front of the American Embassy at about 4:30 or 5 p.m.,” said a nearby kiosk operator, who gave his name only as Rashid. “For a second, I thought that a nearby building must have collapsed....
“I ran outside and saw that the wind was carrying away the smoke from the explosion. There was a motionless body of a man lying in the street, right in front of the embassy building. This must have been the suicide bomber,” Rashid said.
Two police officers guarding the embassy were wounded, he said.
Embassy spokesman David Reinert said no embassy employees were injured.
At the prosecutor general’s office, seven people were injured when a suicide bomber detonated an explosive in or near the lobby.
“The foyer of the prosecutor’s office used to have snow-white marble walls and tinted windows. It looked very civilized and stylish. Now, it has been turned into a mess -- there is soot everywhere, the walls, ceiling and floor have been damaged ... the tinted windowpanes and doors have been smashed and there is glass all over the floor,” Svetlana Artykova, a prosecutor’s spokeswoman, said in a telephone interview.
The explosion outside the Israeli Embassy killed an Interior Ministry officer and a National Security officer, the Uzbek Interior Ministry said. The Israeli government said in a statement that Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom had spoken with Ambassador Tzvi Cohen and “expressed his shock at the horrific event.” An Israeli investigative team immediately was dispatched to Tashkent.
In Washington, U.S. defense spokesmen said Uzbek forces would investigate the attacks and would be primarily responsible for any military response.
Adam Ereli, a State Department spokesman, said Americans have worked closely with Uzbek troops and security forces in counter-terrorism training and would assist in their investigation.
“We have a very good relationship with Uzbek security forces,” Ereli said. “And so we look forward to providing whatever support we can for their investigation.”
A group identifying itself as the Islamic Holy War Group in Uzbekistan claimed responsibility on a website for the three coordinated attacks, Associated Press reported.
“A group of young Muslims carried out martyrdom operations that confused the apostate government and its infidel allies of Americans and Jews,” the statement said.
The explosions came as 15 suspects went on trial in the March violence that left at least 47 people dead, including 33 militants. Those attacks mainly targeted Uzbek police, who have been responsible for a crackdown on Islamic militants, political opponents and other citizens in this populous, primarily Muslim Central Asian nation.
The U.S. has relied on Uzbek cooperation for basing troops in its fight against remnants of the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan. But increasingly disenchanted with the Uzbek government’s record on human rights, the U.S. State Department announced July 13 that it was preparing to cut $18 million in annual military and economic assistance to Uzbekistan.
The U.S. military operation in Afghanistan has been unpopular in Uzbekistan, and militant Islamic groups have expressed public support for the Taliban and Mullah Omar, its leader who is sought by the Americans.
The Islamic Jihad Group, which claimed responsibility for the March attacks, opposes the secular regime in Uzbekistan and has supported calls for establishing a radical Islamic caliphate across Central Asia.
Uzbek President Islam Karimov has imprisoned an estimated 6,000 people on political or religious grounds, many of them not tied to extremist groups, human rights groups say. Torture and miserable prison conditions are “systemic,” according to a recent United Nations report, and the U.S. has cited slow progress in electoral reform and media freedom.
The trial for the suspected bombers has drawn criticism from human rights observers, who say the fact that all 15 defendants have pleaded guilty raised questions about whether the confessions were coerced.
Allison Gill, a researcher for Human Rights Watch who is monitoring the trial in Tashkent, said the defendants this week sat in a cage with their heads bowed, and one by one stood to give detailed confessions.
“There was no meaningful defense. The prosecution asked one, ‘What would you have done if you had not been arrested? Would you have blown yourself up?’ And he said, ‘Yes, I would have committed more crimes. I’m thankful to the police for stopping me,’ ” Gill said.
“One man yesterday stood up and said he feels so guilty for his crime, he wants the death penalty,” she said. “There is no sense of an adversarial process here. In one case, [one of the defendant’s] attorneys had never even seen him.”
Vitaly Ponomaryov, a Moscow-based Central Asian analyst with the human rights group Memorial, said the Uzbek government probably will attempt to portray the attacks as “a reply” to the planned U.S. aid cutoff.
He said Karimov “will definitely try to use today’s acts of terror to justify his jackboot policies in the country and demonstrate, in all its splendor, the failure of Western democracy in Uzbekistan.”
“The new wave of repressions will affect the whole of Uzbekistan,” Ponomaryov said. “And there is a very high chance that this time, Western powers will keep their mouths shut tight -- no one wants his country’s citizens to be blown up in broad daylight by a madman decorated with explosives like a Christmas tree.”
*
Times staff writers Ken Ellingwood in Jerusalem, Alexei V. Kuznetsov in Moscow and John Hendren and Paul Richter in Washington, and special correspondent Saidrasul Gaziev in Tashkent contributed to this report.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.